as a daily user of WinUAE, i can say "no".
emulation is emulation. its not true experience with real machine.
emulator always goes with input delay to some degree, which is inevitable.
this single fact often makes me think buying retro machines back once i had.

in that respect, if i wanted a real Amiga again, i only hope long live one which allows generic peripherals like case, monitors, input devices, drives, and even psu of today's conventional pc-parts for coming replacement issue.

if it was possible, it can cut most of delivery time from overseas, and cheaper.
this is too big deal to neglect.

sorry for such late reply. but i couldn't help but feel my thought should not be that special. many would feel like the same.

You must not have a 50hz / 60hz capable display with sync and/or a retro USB joystick. If you did then you'd think twice before saying that. WinUAE looks and behaves very very similar if you do. I think a lot would fail if asked to tell the difference between 50hz synced WinUAE and a real Amiga when connected to the same display

i used to have A500 and A1200. and still A500 should be somewhere in my room.
my CRT monitors were used multi-sync (don't remember the model) and Sony's expensive one. and joypads of the day are of course atari pin type including modded megadrive 6B pads.

what im saying is emulators on the win os(vista or lator) suffer natural input lag for the os itself.
i know one of emulator had very concern about this issue, and managed to solve to make feel the user like real machine. but its another story.

i noticed some delay things happen when played popular games on WinUAE. (e.g. Jamespond2, Leander and so on.)
after fiddling with configuration, i could guess what part was candidate of delay, and there were too many.
dull usb ports of mobo, my joypads, background OS activity, my monitors' delay, or even generic USB driver of win.
also, the versions of WinUAE seems to be related.
that is, there are too many factors between what im seeing and actual work inside. and it will exist as far as its emulation.
so, i feel its not good to desire for what i experienced once on real machine.

the point is, when i wanted to buy "new" retro hard to avoid such messy situation, i don't want to be bothered by peripherals which are from limited source.

btw, which one of retro type usb joystick/pad do you recommend ?
currently im using CT-V9 (least lag. best for digital 8way inputs), Hori Edge301(second best so far. has far less-lag and reliable digital iuputs than any other xbox or ps type of twin-stick pads.) and several Logicool's F310 and F510(duh).
i browsed to search once, but i only found comp pro2 or Amigakit's big one which looks like robust. (i won't buy cheap looking ones on amazon.)
as this is off topic, so if you dont mind, please pm me about joypad/sticks.

What are the chances of Amiga Reloaded outputting 50hz with VSYNC via HDMI?

Initially it was the intention that Amiga Reloaded should just incorporate a standard Indivision AGA MkII design (a cheaper layout but same function), but this may have changed since then. I hope it has, since we all know that the MkII has a lot of issues and is hard to get to work properly.

A proper synced, low latency 50 Hz HDMI output signal would be very nice indeed and would be a big sales point.

Sorry, radio silence is just caused by so many other projects needing attention. However, I did finish a lot lately, and the ACA500plus is the last one that was already in the works when I decided that I should make an Amiga Reloaded. So yeah, work on the Amiga Reloaded will start about a year late (hoping to get to it early next year).

Sorry, radio silence is just caused by so many other projects needing attention. However, I did finish a lot lately, and the ACA500plus is the last one that was already in the works when I decided that I should make an Amiga Reloaded. So yeah, work on the Amiga Reloaded will start about a year late (hoping to get to it early next year).

The ACA1230/56 is a syncronous design. It may or may not work, just like with the ACA500 and ACA500plus. If it works: Good for you. If it doesn't, it's not covered by product support.

Some ACA500 users have reported success with the ACA1230/56, so there is a chance. However, if you make compatibility a key factor for your buying decision, you should not put the Reloaded main board on your wishlist.

The ACA1230/56 is a syncronous design. It may or may not work, just like with the ACA500 and ACA500plus. If it works: Good for you. If it doesn't, it's not covered by product support.

Some ACA500 users have reported success with the ACA1230/56, so there is a chance. However, if you make compatibility a key factor for your buying decision, you should not put the Reloaded main board on your wishlist.

Jens

@Jens What is the most difficult part to get right from a compatibility viewpoint?
Im guessing that a lot of ppl would like to see something that can replace the A1200 mobo while keeping the rest of the peripherals / expansions.

If it has limited compatibility it will of course have a limited market.